Close Menu
Firearms Forever
  • Home
  • News
  • Guns & Gears
  • Reviews
  • Videos
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Business

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest firearm, hunting, military, and defense news to your inbox.

Popular
Tariffs on the auto industry could take a hit on car insurance rates

Tariffs on the auto industry could take a hit on car insurance rates

May 14, 2025
Violent Venezuelan gang exploits technology to turbocharge its dominance: experts

Violent Venezuelan gang exploits technology to turbocharge its dominance: experts

May 14, 2025
Overland Officer Shoots Suspect During Struggle at a Gas Station

Overland Officer Shoots Suspect During Struggle at a Gas Station

May 14, 2025
Mossberg Releases New 990 Aftershock Semi-Auto Firearm

Mossberg Releases New 990 Aftershock Semi-Auto Firearm

May 14, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Breaking
  • Tariffs on the auto industry could take a hit on car insurance rates
  • Violent Venezuelan gang exploits technology to turbocharge its dominance: experts
  • Overland Officer Shoots Suspect During Struggle at a Gas Station
  • Mossberg Releases New 990 Aftershock Semi-Auto Firearm
  • Flight passenger brings up ‘vaping in the bathroom,’ sparking debate about on-board actions
  • Stocks ride trade deal wave, Trump in Middle East, oil climbs: Live Updates
  • These 12 Handguns Shoot FASTER Than Machine Guns!
  • Republicans Want To Keep Suppressors Registered Like Machine Guns
Wednesday, May 14
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn
Firearms Forever
  • Home
  • News
  • Guns & Gears
  • Reviews
  • Videos
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Business
Subscribe
Firearms Forever
You are at:Home » Shop Talk: Master Luthier and Sons Carry Forward Murray Carter’s Muteki Line
Guns & Gears

Shop Talk: Master Luthier and Sons Carry Forward Murray Carter’s Muteki Line

Tim HuntBy Tim HuntApril 11, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read2 Views
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp
Shop Talk: Master Luthier and Sons Carry Forward Murray Carter’s Muteki Line
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

The Kooskia, Idaho-based Byler family – consisting of father Edd and his three sons Paxton, Zach, and Zane – is the proud new owner of Muteki Knives, a shop founded by Murray Carter to show off his apprentices’ bladesmithing work. The Bylers intend to make it their own, building on Carter’s strong foundation and growing under his tutelage this year.

There are lots of people who already know Edd Byler’s name. Byler is a luthier, and his violins are highly sought after. “I went full-time 12 years ago, and have won some awards, and it’s been a blast,” Byler says. He’s being a tad modest: his work has netted him more than ten different competition distinctions in the world of custom violins. “These competition judges look for tone – it needs to sound good – but they also want it to look good,” Byler explains. Among many painstaking processes, the scrollwork on a Byler violin is done by hand, with a chisel, until it just looks right. “People can’t believe how long it takes to agonize over every little detail.”

Byler and his sons have been interested in edged tools all their life. “It’s an interest I’ve always had,” Byler says. He grew up experimenting in his own father’s mechanic/fabrication shop, and still has a knife he made as a boy. “And Paxton – my youngest son – made his first knife when he was just 12 years old,” Byler adds. But none of the Byler men became serious about knife making as a possible career until late last year. They have had a years-long friendship with Murray Carter, who lives and works in Council, Idaho; after moving closer to that neck of the woods they became fascinated with his craft.

Then came a day when Carter made the Bylers an offer to purchase Muteki lock, stock, and barrel – and we mean that literally: not only did Carter provide the Bylers with a coke forge, Japanese power hammer, and enough Hitachi white paper steel and ironwood slabs to make 1000 knives, he gave them a five gallon bucket of Japanese clay for coating the near-finished blades before quenching. “The thin clay coating prevents a vapor barrier for forming at the surface of the steel, allowing it to cool quicker,” is how Byler explains it. He says that part of the purchase deal was training in, and access to, Carter’s particular time-honored bladesmithing techniques, of which this is just one. “We use the exact processes that he uses, and he’s a real stickler for the traditional Japanese bladesmithing techniques – that’s what makes him such a great teacher.”

Carter and the Bylers in their shop

While Muteki originally functioned as a showcase of apprentice work, the Bylers want to move it past that designation into full-fledged, full-featured custom pieces worthy of their teacher. “That was the dream – to make a knife like Murray Carter!” Byler says. “We went into this pretty optimistic we could do it, and Murray’s optimistic too.” So are early customers. The new Muteki website launched just last month, but Byler tells us there has been steady sales and positive response from customers. “We have people coming to us who have bought a Carter knife in the past, and we want them to know we are committed to providing our customers with a top-quality knife,” Byler says.

The plan, over the next few months, is to ramp up the workflow until each of Byler’s sons can make around 30 knives a month. “Once the boys have hit their stride I’m going to back away a bit,” Byler continues. He remains committed to luthier-work, and needs time to work on his instruments, but will still very much be a presence in the Muteki shop. “I’d like to do about a quarter of the knives my sons do each month.” Each Byler has their own mark, too, so buyers will be able to tell which Byler made which Muteki knife.

Currently, every Byler-era Muteki knife is a Carter design, but sometime in the near future we can expect to see the first original Byler model – and that knife will have a unique stamp on it to show that it will be the first of a new generation of Muteki blades. “We’re excited to design our original knife,” Byler says. “But we really want to think about it a bit first.”

Beyond that, the Byler boys’ training isn’t over. “The association with Murray is ongoing, it was very much a part of the deal,” Byler explains. They’ll be attending shows and sharing a table at them with Carter this year: Blade Show in June, the Idaho Knife Association Show in August, and they are all at the OKCA show in Oregon this weekend. They’re even planning on going with Carter to Japan – where he lived and worked for more than a decade – to be introduced to his suppliers there, and establish their own relationships with them to keep the flow of authentic materials coming. In short, while the Bylers want to make Muteki their own, they are keenly aware of the importance of maintaining the Japanese bladesmithing traditions.

After a winter spent making their first knives in an uninsulated, unheated garage, the Bylers are also getting ready to build a full-on knife shop. By this time next year, the new Muteki should be in full swing, but Byler has no intentions of forsaking the name’s roots; he is carrying Carter’s commitment to hand-made pieces forward. “We know what we’re supposed to be,” says Edd Byler. “We know we’re being watched closer right now than we ever will be. We want people to trust that Muteki is in good hands.”

A new batch of Byler-made Muteki knives are available at KnivesShipFree right now.

Knife in Featured Image: [Top to bottom] Muteki Knives Petty, Paring Knife


The information provided by Firearms Forever (the “Site”) is for general recreational purposes only. The views and opinions expressed on the Site are those of the author or those quoted and do not necessarily reflect the views of any entities they represent. All information on the Site is provided in good faith, however, we make no representation or warranty of any kind, express or implied, regarding the accuracy, adequacy, validity, reliability, availability, or completeness of the information on the Site. Under no circumstance shall we have any liability to you for any loss or damage as the result of the use of the Site or reliance on any information provided. Your use of the Site and your reliance on any information on the Site is solely at your own risk.



Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleFatal NYC helicopter crash prompts GOP lawmaker to call for ending popular tourist flights
Next Article Trump’s tariffs: What tariffs have been imposed on major trading partners or paused?

Related Article

Overland Officer Shoots Suspect During Struggle at a Gas Station

Overland Officer Shoots Suspect During Struggle at a Gas Station

May 14, 2025
These 12 Handguns Shoot FASTER Than Machine Guns!

These 12 Handguns Shoot FASTER Than Machine Guns!

May 14, 2025
NYPD Officers Fire Multiple Rounds At Man With Knife

NYPD Officers Fire Multiple Rounds At Man With Knife

May 14, 2025
Taylor Cortes Joins Jack Wolf Pack with Prickly Pear Scalpel

Taylor Cortes Joins Jack Wolf Pack with Prickly Pear Scalpel

May 13, 2025
Hallowed Ground: Dr. Dabbs Tours the USS Drum

Hallowed Ground: Dr. Dabbs Tours the USS Drum

May 13, 2025
2 Brothers Team Up to Escape Cops in Wild Dual Freeway Chase

2 Brothers Team Up to Escape Cops in Wild Dual Freeway Chase

May 13, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
Don't Miss
Violent Venezuelan gang exploits technology to turbocharge its dominance: experts

Violent Venezuelan gang exploits technology to turbocharge its dominance: experts

Overland Officer Shoots Suspect During Struggle at a Gas Station

Overland Officer Shoots Suspect During Struggle at a Gas Station

Mossberg Releases New 990 Aftershock Semi-Auto Firearm

Mossberg Releases New 990 Aftershock Semi-Auto Firearm

Flight passenger brings up ‘vaping in the bathroom,’ sparking debate about on-board actions

Flight passenger brings up ‘vaping in the bathroom,’ sparking debate about on-board actions

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest firearm, hunting, military, and defense news to your inbox.

About
About

Firearms Forever is one of the biggest news portals dedicated to firearm, hunting, military, and defense news, using news from the most trusted source.

We're social, connect with us:

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
Popular Posts
Tariffs on the auto industry could take a hit on car insurance rates

Tariffs on the auto industry could take a hit on car insurance rates

May 14, 2025
Violent Venezuelan gang exploits technology to turbocharge its dominance: experts

Violent Venezuelan gang exploits technology to turbocharge its dominance: experts

May 14, 2025
Overland Officer Shoots Suspect During Struggle at a Gas Station

Overland Officer Shoots Suspect During Struggle at a Gas Station

May 14, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest firearm, hunting, military, and defense news to your inbox.

Copyright © 2025. All rights reserved.
  • About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.